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Tang Guo’an

(???)
1858 ~ 1913

Tang Guo'an (Tong Kai-son) was born in October 1858 in Guangdong Province near Macao and was raised in a Christian family. Tang studied in the U.S. with the second contingent of the Chinese Educational Commission (CEM), sent in 1873. After public high school and preparatory school at Phillips Exeter Academy, he spent one year at Yale College, in 1880-81. Then the CEM was cancelled and all the students were recalled to China, due to acrimony between the two governments.

From 1890 to 1899, Tang held important positions in the the Kaiping Mining and Engineering Company near Tianjin and the Chinese Imperial Railway Administration, in Liaoning. From 1900-1903, when North China experienced total disruption by the Boxer Uprising and war, Tang took refuge in Hong Kong, where he served as the first board chairman of the new city Chinese YMCA.

The next four years were spent in Shanghai, where Tang again worked for railway companies and took leadership in the YMCA and other voluntary civic associations. He earned a national reputation as a writer and speaker promoting moral and social reforms.

In 1907, Tang Guo'an was recruited to join the Foreign Office in Beijing where, along with other former CEM students of the "Young China" group of reformers, he endeavored to recover China's sovereign rights, ceded to foreign powers through the unequal treaties. Tang Guo'an first served as English interpreter and secretary for Yuan Shikai and other high-level officials. He then worked on two major China - U.S.initiatives -- halting the international opium trade and resuming the education of Chinese students in the U .S.

In February 1909, Tang was a commissioner and the spokesman for the Chinese delegation to the first international Opium Conference meeting in Shanghai. His closing speech, translated and distributed into several European languages, inspired a strong conference resolution urging immediate actions to stop the trade in China's foreign concession areas. In December that same year, Tang accompanied Chinese students to the U.S., the first to study there in thirty years.

Tang Guo'an became the director and then founding president of the Tsinghua School in Beijing, the forerunner of Tsinghua University, which was set up to prepare students for study in the U.S. Tang supervised initial faculty recruitment, fund-raising and construction planning until his early death in August 1913, at the age of 54.

About the Author

By Carol Lee Hamrin

George Mason University Research Professor and Senior Associate for Global China Center

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